Ed Kelce proved he is less than a little bothered about the ongoing conspiracy theories
From super bizarre theories behind her Person of The Year award to a Fox News host claiming she’s an ‘asset’ to the government, it appears Taylor Swift is apparently not exempt from having some pretty wild conspiracy theories being spread about her.
But as they say, the sky is limit as another bonkers conspiracy theory surrounding the singer claims that she is somehow tied to the ‘Antichrist’.
This claim has long circulated on the internet, that ‘Karma’ singer either is the Antichrist herself, or tied to them in some way, but it has recently taken a new turn due to her relationship with NFL player Travis Kelce.
While their budding relationship has taken up much of people’s social media feeds, a post recently begun circulating about this preposterous claim.
“A televangelist from Arkansas claims Satan is engineering Taylor Swift’s marriage to Travis Kelce so she can give birth to the antichrist and launch the apocalyptic thousand-year war against Christ. Must she do everything? And during a world tour,” the post read.
I mean, in the middle of a world tour too? I just don’t think she has the time.
Now before we can even jump into this, it is important to note that the televangelist who supposedly said this hasn’t been named and the wording is particularly vague – essentially making it an unsubstantiated claim that some preacher somewhere has publicly said an oddly specific and prophetic claim about the music star.
However, Ed Kelce certainly saw the funny side of it and took to posting on Instagram after the post made the rounds on social media.
Writing in the comment section, he joked: “That’s my boy!”, much to the amusement of other social media users who also didn’t take the post seriously.
“[Ed Kelce] this just made me laugh so hard… you are the best!” one user commented.
“Ok you win the internet for the day lol,” remarked another.
“We love a supportive father,” another joked.
While other users simply joked about the pure ludicrousness of the alleged claim in the first place.
“All this while playing to sold out arenas world wide AND making cinnamon rolls and pop tarts for the Chiefs offensive line,” one user wrote.
“And I thought I had a lot going on!” another joked.
While a third said: “The pressure we put on working women! When will it stop?”